Clinical Applications of the History of Medicine in Muslim-Majority Nations

Abstract Since the early twentieth century, a number of physicians and professional historians have argued for the integration of the history of medicine into both medical education and clinical practice. After the supplanting of the humoral model of medicine in favor of the germ theory of disease in the late nineteenth century, medical school administrators have repeatedly asked medical historians for their rationale for studying “outdated science” in medical training programs beyond antiquarianism and knowledge for knowledge’s sake. However, a number of arguments can be adduced for the use and relevance of the history of medicine, including the observations that history: 1) provides examples of inspiring or highly ethical individuals who can serve as role models in practitioner identity formation; 2) helps to develop critical analytical skills and other modes of humanistic thought and behavior directly relevant to patient care (e.g., empathy); 3) promotes culturally-competent care, since history informs culture; 4) encourages inquiry into the sociocultural factors that affect the development of modern medical ecosystems; 5) provides a philosophical tradition for critiquing ethics in the medical profession. This contribution specifically traces the potential uses of Islamic medical history in the clinic and medical schools in Muslim-majority countries, primarily in the Middle East.

and his Muqaddimah should be included in history of medicine curricula in medical schools. He coined and explored the concept of ˓asabiyya, or "tribal solidarity," which is key to understanding the paradoxical historical continuities and modern disjunctions of North African and Islamic cultures. 6 He additionally established a rationalist strain in Islamic historiography counter to the traditional teleological, hagiographic, and theological histories of that time period. Dale's assertion that Ibn Khaldun was "the last Greek and the first Annaliste historian" is valid in that he employed "classical logic to identify enduring socioeconomic realities underlying cultural phenomena and ephemeral events, what he describes as the 'general conditions of regions, races and periods that constitute the historian's foundation. '" 7 In other words, Ibn Khaldun was working in the Greek empirical tradition of Aristotle and Hippocrates -he was searching for fundamental axioms of politics, environment, and human behavior to deduce from them general laws of historical development. Ibn Khaldun therefore serves as a valuable paradigm for humanistic and medical educators to illustrate that Islam developed an historical methodology fully compatible with, and drawing on the same intellectual traditions as, modern scientific methods. His observations additionally provide valuable insights into modern Muslim societies, much like westerners today probe Shakespeare to understand human psychology or read Max Weber to illuminate the principles of current social institutions. Excerpts from Ibn Khaldun's works would be valuable in the syllabus of an introductory cultural competence course in Middle Eastern countries, specifically his comments on the social differences between settled and nomadic cultures, which are still being played out today (sometimes violently) in Egypt, North Africa, the Negev, Jordan, and Kuwait.
Islam has never endorsed a binary "two cultures" split in humanistic and scientific knowledge: the word 'ilm (knowledge, triliteral semitic root ‫-م‬ ‫ل‬ ‫,ع-‬ "know") encompasses all branches of knowledge, both historical and modern, in an analogous way that the forms of the Latin root scio, scire (to know) denoted all areas of human knowledge before Whewell's narrowing of this semantic field with the neologism "scientist. " 8 However, Ibn Khaldun did distinguish between what we today call the exact or rational sciences (for example, logic and mathematics, al-mantiq and al hisab) and "al-ʿulum al-naqliyya al-wadʿiyya" or "traditionally transmitted sciences" which included theology (kalam), law (fiqh), and sayings and traditions of the Prophet (sunnah and hadith). 9 Ibn Khaldun's term "revealed" (al-naqliyya) clearly indicates his philosophical stance toward the continuing relevance and timeless value of divine Quranic wisdom and past human knowledge. His view that religious-based knowledge and the natural and physical sciences should be studied on an equal footing is widely accepted in theory among modern Muslim thinkers, even in the face of the dominance of engineering, medicine, and law programs in higher education in the Middle East based on western models, which is largely an artifact of colonialism.
Islamic historiography of all periods is generally not positivist and does not often subscribe to myths of progress and evolution; thus Islamic histories provide a solid foundation for valorization of past historical knowledge. Knowledge, arguments, and exempla from the past possess high status in Islamic cultures, and Muslims consciously attempt to imitate the Prophet Muhammad (SAW). Medical history formed a part of Islamic golden age science and medical writing, simply because Al-Farabi, Ibn al-Haytham, Ibn Sina, Al-Razi, and Al-Zahrawi were writing within a still living Aristotelian and Galeno-Hippocratic framework of humoralism and the commentaries on those works. The Damascus physician Ibn Abī Uṣaybiʿah wrote a historical biographical dictionary of ancient and medieval Islamic physicians in 1246 CE entitled The Best Accounts of the Classes of Physicians. 10 The following factors predispose Muslims to valorize the past: 1) the Abbasid, Umayyad, and Fatimid caliphates and later Ottoman empire circa 800-1400 CE actively promoted science, technology, music, and literature, and material wealth flourished during this "Islamic Golden Age;" 2) the period of the Prophet Mohammed (SAW) and his companions is held up as an example of correct religious praxis (sunnah, or traditional way of life), thus the past continues to exert a considerable direct moral influence; 3) historical documents such as the Quran and the oral traditions of the ahadith (prophetic sayings) are viewed as eternal (thus the past and present are indistinguishable); 4) some conservative Muslims equate any aspect of modernity with westernization and colonization and pride themselves on the continuity of their traditional culture; 5) Salafist theologians aligned with national governments, for example the Al-Sheikh family in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (descendants of Ibn ' Abd al-Wahhab), have co-opted the concept of bid'ah (innovation), which originally meant heresies (new unorthodox religious practices), to condemn any form of modern change or development in order to maintain the political status quo, thus privileging historical patterns of life. Muslims' strong orientation to the past, in order to preserve cultural and religious continuity in the face of increasing international secularization, provides an entry way to validating the study of history and medical history as relevant topics in medical education and clinical practice.
A very simple example of how valorization and sensitivity to the past with respect to medical history can inform modern practice would be the change in philosophical speculation on the origin of life in Islamic theology in reference to abortion and the use of embryonic stem cells. The medieval legal Islamic consensus was that life began when the embryo was ensouled at 40 or 120 days and had no legal status before that time. 11 However, modern opinions have shifted in Islamic jurisprudence, paralleling pro-life stances in Western countries such that abortion is now banned in many Muslim-majority countries except to save a woman's life, and the use of embryos and stem cells is banned or highly restricted. Iran, however, maintains liberal policies on embryonic stem cell use and other Muslim countries are now permitting their use, undoubtedly due to potential economic and health benefits deriving from stem cell therapies. 12 Muslim practitioners and medical students would greatly benefit from learning about the historical evolution of philosophical ideas and legal precedents concerning the origin, purpose, and status of life in Islam, as it is a key medical ethical concept affecting abortion, human subjects protection in research, end-of-life care, futile and palliative care, and artificial respiration.

MEDICAL HISTORY IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF CRITICAL AND ANALY TICAL THINKING
In my dual roles in premedical and medical education in the State of Qatar, one consistent observation has been that over the course of their medical training students' cognitive tool kit, the rational strategies they employ for solving problems, slowly diminishes from an expansive set of skills during the premedical years to a more limited set of analytical tools, namely differential diagnosis, and variants of inductive and deductive reasoning, including the hypothetico-deductive method. Tools such as Bayesian networks, statistical inference, and the scientific method are the best means of establishing correct diagnosis, etiology, epidemiology, and evidence-based therapeutics, among other issues, but can prove inadequate when applied to complex multi-factorial phenomena such as human behavior, hospital ecosystems, medical ethics scenarios, and moral reasoning. The traditional humanities, on the other hand, have developed a range of strategies to address complex questions holistically within the categories of medical experience which cannot be broken down into smaller parts by analysis; for example self-reflective practice, intuitional knowledge and emotional intelligences (empathy), language-based tools (analogy, symbolic and metaphorical reasoning), and narrative approaches such as the use of historical exempla, parables, homilies, and proverbs to sharpen ethical inquiry, to provide just a few brief examples.
Within the popular paradigm of self-reflective practice, medical students and practitioners of all religious creeds and cultural backgrounds should be aware of their biases, and how they situate themselves culturally and religiously with respect to their patients -this is the essence of culturally competent care. The Muslim majority nations are extremely diverse with respect to history, culture, and language, even though they share a common religion. Core cultural rituals, customs, and world views are remarkedly resilient in Islamic societies, and the anti-westernization and anti-colonial movements that swept the Muslim world in the 1960s and which culminated in the wave of traditionalism and conservatism following the Iranian Revolution in 1979 have reinforced traditional cultural patterns. Therefore, historical reflection will necessarily form a central part of any Muslim healthcare worker's self-reflective practice, for example, harmonizing traditional Quranic learning and ways of life with the forces of modernity, globalization, and the scientific doctrines such as the theory of evolution that contradict religious narratives.
One consequence of Saudi Arabia's international mosque-and madrasah (kuttab)-building soft power diplomacy strategy was the widespread distribution and formal teaching of ultra-conservative and literalist Wahhabist texts such as Kitab al-Tawhid (Book of Oneness [of God]). The subtext of Ibn ' Abd al-Wahhab's concept of Tawhid was that there is only one interpretation of Islam, leading to a common belief among many adherents that Islam is monolithic. This was recognized as an extremist view even by his eighteenth-century contemporaries, and the resurgence of Ibn ' Abd al-Wahhab's works has been linked to modern jihadist ideologies. Due to the socioeconomic, cultural, and religious complexity of the patient populations in Muslim majority nations, therefore, the author advocates the formal teaching in medical schools of Islamic diversity, including the history of the peoples of the pre-Islamic Middle East, and such unpleasant historical topics as Arab colonization of North African and Persian cultures and the East African slave trade. Most of the current ethnic and political conflicts of the Middle East can be understood with just a cursory review of history.
A short course in Islamic epistemologies would be another welcome addition to Middle East medical school curricula in which historical and modern modes of Islamic thought could be introduced and compared analytically with the scope, methods, and aims of common medical modes of rational inquiry such as the scientific method, clinical decision-making, and medical ethical reasoning, with an emphasis on using the best epistemological tool in the right cultural and clinical context. Two brief examples of Islamic epistemological processes (ways of knowing) would include: first, the legal reasoning of Shariah law as pertaining to ethics determinations, including qiyas, consent of scholars, and public benefit (maslaha); and secondly, the centering of all knowledge in the Quran, with modern knowledge believed to derive analogically, symbolically, or metaphorically from the Quran's eternal and comprehensive framework. Serious attempts were made in the 1980s and 1990s by such scholars as Seyyed Hossein Nasr and Ismail Al-Faruqi to Islamicize both science and knowledge. 13 An often-cited example of the Islamicization of knowledge includes embryologist Keith L. Moore's claim and subsequent textbook written with Abdul Majid al-Zindani that modern embryology is described accurately in the Quran. 14 Moore and al-Zindani, however, appear to have been unaware of previous similar religious texts, the Alexandrian anatomists, or the embryological work of Aristotle which are likely sources of the Quranic passages.

PAR ADIGM SHIFTS: UNDER STANDING HISTORICAL DISE A SE MODELS AND ILLNESS BELIEFS
In multicultural patient populations, patients often hold widely divergent beliefs about why they become sick. Responses range from views that disease is caused by external forces such as supernatural beings (and malevolent forces in Islam such as djinn, al ayn, or hasad) or biological agents (microbes or germs) to attitudes that disease is the result of internal imbalance (the hot/ cold paradigm of Hispanic, Indian, and Chinese medicine, and the humoral model of classical Greek cultures). All of these illness beliefs (disease models) originate in deeply held historical modes of thought intimately related to culture, and are often firmly embedded in linguistic metaphors. Patients' beliefs about illness can affect their acceptance of a treatment plan, their use of alternative medicine, or may even result in avoidance of evidence-based medicine. 15 While the majority of Muslims today accept western evidence-based medicine and receive their medical care in hospitals, remnants of earlier medical philosophies remain influential. For example, the still well-regarded tibb al-nabi or Prophetic Medicine (discussed below) does not distinguish between physiological illness and illness arising from religious disbelief, doubt, and failure to follow Muslim rituals. All foods mentioned in the Quran (except alcohol), for example, talbeenah, olives, pomegranates, figs, dates, honey, are believed by Muslims to be medicinal in nature. Muslims do not automatically seek psychiatric and psychological services when experiencing abnormal behavior due to the general belief that possession by spirits is the cause of mental illness. These persistent illness beliefs obviously affect patients' relationships with health systems and practitioners in numerous ways.
Fatalism and resignation represent the most common Muslim stances toward illness and misfortune due to the dogma that Allah propels all of creation and sanctions all suffering. According to the Quran, "no affliction comes about but by Allah's permission" (64:11). The Quran also promises that "so verily, with the hardship, there is relief " (94:5). To counter surrender to illness, Hanbali jurist Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya (1292-1350) in his compilation Prophetic Medicine espoused ijtihad or "struggle" and "effort" to regain wellness. 16 Another widespread belief in Islam is that suffering during illness is a process of purification, and brings about expiation of sins and benefits in paradise: "No Muslim is afflicted with any harm …but that Allah expiates his sins because of that" (Sahih Bukhari, 70.551). According to Dif, Muslims know that they do not have the power that permits them to master certain circumstances of their existence, in particular that which touches their health….they understand that Allah is the master of everything, of his destiny specifically. Every human being must live by passing many trials, which are however tests imposed by Allah to distinguish the sincere believers from the hypocrites. The belief that one's being belongs entirely to God is consistent and widespread in Islam and informs key medical ethical concepts related to the sense of autonomy, fatalism, and the strong prohibition against suicide. 18 In their roles as comforters and counsellors, a basic knowledge of the traditional role of the Quran and hadith would be helpful for physicians to guide Muslim patients towards an understanding of disease within standard Islamic orthodoxy. As an example, the author's Muslim medical colleagues often remind patients who refuse treatment (believing that their illness is fated by God) of the following hadith: "The Prophet ‫)ﷺ(‬ said, 'There is no disease that Allah has created, except that He also has created its treatment'" (Al-Bukhari, 76.1). 19 In summary, the study of the history of medicine introduces the key concept of paradigm shifts and how dominant medical philosophies (including spiritual forces, humoralism, germ theory, genetic medicine, personalized medicine, and others) have risen and fallen. Through historical appreciation of different philosophies of medicine, practitioners then become more aware of the economic, social, and cultural dimensions of illness. The big-picture thinking involved in tracing historical processes in medical history research thus encourages practitioners to take a wider view of their own practices which takes into account their ethical, practical, social, and economic roles in society. History, as a reflection of culture, also provides insights into the patient perspective on disease and the profession of medicine itself.

UNDER STANDING CULTURE AND RELIGION: CLINICAL CULTUR AL COMPETENCY
The works of Vanessa Gamble and Joel Howell provide the most compelling arguments for requiring historical competency in physicians to aid them in delivering culturally sensitive healthcare. Gamble documented fears expressed in the African American popular press in the 1980s and 1990s during the AIDS crisis that medical doctors were either experimenting on Black patients or that the AIDS virus had been purposefully engineered to unleash genocide on Blacks in America. 20  . Practitioners must also be informed about the historical dimensions of folk medicines as well and how they have developed, since many of them possess cultural and religious significance. Faith-based therapies such as Quranic recitation can be successfully suggested to patients as adjuvant therapy to modern provenly efficacious interventions. This training helps clinicians negotiate modern allopathic and traditional treatment strategies with patients and families.
Effective traditional topical and internal antibiotics, anti-diarrheals, antipyretics, and other agents have been identified through randomized controlled trials (RCTs). However, the medical case study literature of traditional treatments in the MENA region contains numerous reports of eschars from cauterization (wasim, kaii), improper alignment of fractures from tajbir (bonesetting), infection or scarring from bloodletting and cupping (hijama), or heavy metal poisoning (Hg, Sb, Pb) arising from such traditional preparations as kohl (antibiotic eyepaints; active ingredients, ithmed = antimony and galena = lead sulphide) and bint al-dhahab (daughter of gold, containing PbO, antimony and cadmium). Lead encephalopathy in children has been reported in regions that use bint al-dhahab or kohls on children, and its importation is now banned in many Middle Eastern countries. 25

MENTAL ILLNESS IN ISL A M, AND THE DECLINE OF MUSLIM
INTELLECTUAL TR ADITIONS participants reported using one or more types of CAM therapies within the past year to address mental illness" with the number one therapy being Quranic recitation (including exorcism). 26 In a cross-sectional study of 2,514 subjects in Qatar in 2010, Bener and Ghulom reported that 43.5% of men and 34.5% of women believed that mental illness was caused by evil spirits, such as djinn (genies). 27 It is obligatory (fard) for Muslims to believe in djinn since they are unambiguously described in the Quran, and in most Muslim-majority countries djinn possession is widely believed to be the main cause of mental illness, often cured by exorcism rituals (ruqya). 28 Ameen lists the following mental conditions caused by Shaytan (Satan) spirits or djinn: "intense fear…psychological and nervous diseases, insanity, depression, anxiety, tension, epilepsy, Waswaas (whispers from the Shaytaan), personality disorders…hallucinations. " 29 In Saudi Arabia, Al-Habeeb reported that traditional Islamic medicine ascribed serious mental disorders such as psychosis, aphonia, or delusions to either as-sihr (sorcery) or djinn possession. 30 Medieval Muslim physicians also wrote about madness by fusing the materialist tradition of Galenic and pseudo-Aristotelian texts with the sparse discussions of personhood (nafs) and spirits (ruh) scattered throughout the Quran. Early Islamic physicians such as Ibn Sina (980-1037) and Al-Razi (854-925) drew heavily on Aristotle to aid them in understanding the soul and ' Ali ibn al' Abbas al-Majusi (Latin: Haly Abbas) in his Kitab al-Maliki described many neurological diseases such as hemiplegia, amnesia, and epilepsy in a purely clinical fashion. Al-Majusi's book was widely reprinted in the Latin translation by Constantinus Africanus called the Liber pantegni; thus, the Greek psychological heritage was expanded upon by the clinical observational work of Islamic physicians, who were foundational to early psychological theory in Europe.
Clearly, both Western and Islamic psychological theories therefore share some common philosophical roots and a shared textual traditional. This historical fact, when discussed with Muslim patients, may increase acceptance of western psychiatry. The individual practitioner in the Middle East will need to decide how to negotiate the difficult terrain of differing beliefs on disease origins with patients and families, since pharmacological and psychiatric approaches to mental illness developed in Western countries are not acceptable to all Muslim patients who are unfamiliar with modern psychology's common origins; dismissing outright supernatural origins of mental illness risks offending patients and challenging deeply held belief systems, resulting in non-adherence and non-compliance.

ISL A MIC MEDICAL ETHICS
The emerging discipline of Islamic medical ethics, initiated during the 1980s to the 1990s following medical innovations such as organ transplantation, IVF, and artificial respiration, should be taught in medical schools in all Muslim-majority countries in tandem with a basic historical grounding in fiqh (law), since many laws and regulations governing medical practice today in these countries can be directly traced to late medieval fatawa (opinions) of the recognized schools of law (madhhabs): the four Sunni schools (Maliki, Hanafi, Shafi'i, Hanbali), the two main Shia schools (Zaidi, Ja'fari), the Ibadi madhhab (Oman), as well as numerous other historical schools. Rulings of these schools must be interpreted within historical context, since each school deliberates in a different manner, and is dominant in a particular region of the Muslim world, therefore reflecting local customary law ('urf). In a few countries, shariah law courts constitute the primary legislative system, while in others they rule only on family matters, and in some cases they compete for authority with civil courts. The Hanbali school operates over most of the Arabian peninsula and is aligned with Salafism, thus its rulings are strict and follow textual authority closely. The more liberal Shafi'i school can be found across Africa and Asia, specifically the Horn of Africa and Indonesia, and its rulings are often quite different from other Sunni schools as the local populations there are not Arabs.
Why should these legal technicalities concern the Muslim medical student or practitioner? Although Imams, Muftis, sheikhs and Mullahs are respected and revered for their wisdom, it is not obligatory to follow their counsel, since Sunni Islam has no formal clerical structures nor can any Muslim claim infallibility. Thus individual Muslim practitioners and patients must make their own medical ethical decisions within their particular Islamic religious belief system in novel situations if there are no extant rulings. Who can speak authoritatively on medical ethics in Islam is a contentious and evolving question among schools of fiqh, governments, scientists, and physicians but the debates are clearly anchored in medieval history. Thus, to productively join these debates, students and physicians will need some grounding in the historical context and historical development of Islamic medical ethics.
Medical ethics itself can properly be said to have originated in the pre-Islamic Babylonian empire with the Code of Hammurabi (c. 1754 BCE) which describes medical liability of physicians for killing patients. Both the Aristotelian and Hippocratic ethical traditions can be traced within medieval Islam, and the ninth-century author Al-Ruhawi produced a lengthy treatise on ethics entitled Adab al-Tabib (Ethics of a Physician), a mixture of deontological and virtue ethics. 31 Although there are gaps in the textual history, Islam therefore has a long tradition of medical ethics that can be productively consulted in forming modern opinions.
Islamic medical ethics is primarily deontological, stemming from duties outlined in a hierarchy of texts consisting of the Quran (Allah's revealed truth to Prophet Mohammed [SAW]), the Sunnah (acts of the Prophet [SAW]), and Ahadith (collected sayings of the Prophet [SAW] attributed to him by other speakers). As I have explained elsewhere, "if these texts cannot provide unequivocal answers, jurists turn to the consent of scholars (ijma'), analogies (qiyas), and then finally invoking the principle of maslaha (public benefit) if necessary. " 32 Reasoning from maslaha is a form of consequentialist thinking most akin to Utilitarianism and is becoming a more widely used deliberative technique in Islamic bioethics as a result of highly novel developments in biomedicine, such as in vitro fertilization and artificial reproductive technologies, stem cells, and robotics which have no analogues in sacred scriptures. Recently, biomedical researchers have been meeting with Muslim jurists at special international congresses to create policies and issue opinions. Thus modern-day Muslims in healthcare professions will need to acquire some basic knowledge of the historical madhhabs and their reasoning processes in order to participate productively in emerging medical ethical debates which affect Muslim patient populations and research subjects.

ISL A MIC MEDICAL ETHICS A S A DISTINCT DISCIPLINE: CULTUR AL DIFFERENCES IN DISCLOSURE AND PATIENT AUTONOMY
Full medical information disclosure has become the norm in western societies due to the emphasis on patient autonomy and the patients' rights movement. Historically, however, disclosure of information to patients and patient autonomy manifests quite differently in traditional Muslim families who follow the wali (guardianship) or mahram system. Families always expect to be part of the decision-making process of their individual family members, and families commonly ask physicians not to reveal fatal illnesses to a patient, particularly to the very young and very old. According to Al-Bahri, "in certain Middle Eastern, North African and South Asian societies, the family has final authority in [treatment decision-making], as often the patient is inseparably linked to the family as a whole. " 33 In a survey of 200 Bahraini physicians in 2019, over 85% indicated that they would make an exception to full disclosure of information to the patient, particularly if requested by the family, and in another survey of 164 Jordanian physicians, a surprising 23% indicated that they "usually withheld the diagnosis of serious illness from patients. " 34 The author has personally encountered numerous instances in the Gulf region health systems in which historical medical services provision based on traditional culture (both medical and social patriarchalism) has clashed with a growing patients' rights movement and the growing autonomy of young people, due to increasing modernization and westernization and the decline of large extended family structures. Awareness of, and perhaps even formal training in, historical modes of provider-patient relations in Islamic societies and shared decision-making processes would be helpful for providers-in-training.

PROFESSIONAL IDENTIT Y DEVELOPMENT: NARR ATIVE MEDICINE, ROLE MODELLING, AND THE PROFESSIONAL WORKPL ACE
Although there is the risk of perpetuating Thomas Carlyle's "Great Man Theory of History," a more gender and racially inclusive list of medical and scientific heroes and heroines from the past who embodied both the moral behaviors and high level of technical proficiency encouraged in modern medicine (for example, selflessness, benevolence, intellectual rigor, observational precision, and competence) may prove valuable in inspiring and instructing physicians and students at all stages of their careers. 35 The comprehensive assessment known as the "Flexner II Report," detailing the state of medical education in the US and issued by the Carnegie Foundation 100 years after Abraham Flexner's foundational report in 1910, concluded that greater attention needs to be paid to physician identity formation in medical education. 36 We ask healthcare professionals to be sensitive to their patients' race, religion, gender, and culture. Why not ask doctors to be culturally literate about their own profession and to examine their own subject positions? A thorough understanding of the self, including one's professional identity, has long been viewed as a pathway to knowledge, for example in the tradition of the Oracle of Delphi's "know thyself. " Physician-historian Jeffrey Baker recounts how, in his view, historical research into the fields of pediatrics and gynecology "transformed my self-identity….I returned from my historical journey with a different understanding of my professional relationship to other health care workers. " 37 Doctors' stories, such as Atul Gawande's Complications (2002) or Jerome Groopman's How Doctors Think (2007), are helpful in modelling professional behaviors and ethics for physicians-in-training, and Muslim doctors' narratives from the late medieval to modern period are equally valuable. Ibn Sina (Avicenna) is known to most Muslim school children: he wrote over one million words on medicine in the Qanun fi al-Tibb (the equivalent size of a modern multi-authored internal medicine textbook) and claimed to have mastered the medical knowledge of his time by age eighteen. He wrote on all the topics comprising the medieval quadrivium and trivium and once joked "medicine is not one of the difficult sciences, and therefore I excelled in it in a very short time. " 38 In addition, his synthetic method stands as a prime example for modern Muslim medical practitioners and students that philosophy, empiricism, and medical science are not incompatible with Islam. Therefore he represents a valuable counterweight to the postcolonial nationalist discourses that western science is inimical to the Islamic world view and corrosive to Islamic values. Abu Bakr Muḥammad b. Zakariyāʾ Rāzi (Al-Rāzi) has been hailed, in the same way as Hippocrates in Epidemics I, III and On the Surgery, as a timeless model for close clinical observation. He was the first physician to differentiate measles from smallpox, in al-Jadari wa'l-ḥaṣba (On Smallpox and Measles), through careful observation. 39 Although Al-Razi's Kitab al-Mansuri and Kitāb al-Ḥāwī fī al-ṭibb are based on several recognizable sources (Aristotle, Aetius of Amida, Paulus Aegineta, Oribasius, Galen, Hippocrates), On Smallpox and Measles appears to be largely original, an important and inspirational fact for Muslims since novel scientific knowledge production in Muslim-majority countries today lags well below western countries according to all standard metrics. 40 He also stands as a reminder against dogmatism in medicine when he argued in the Shukuk al-jalinus (Doubts about Galen) that physicians should not rely solely on previous authority but rather question everything.
In the modern period, woman physician Nawal El-Saadawi has been inspirational to Muslim doctors in the region for decades due to her advocacy for women in medicine, human rights in Islam, and efforts against female genital mutilation. Born in 1931 in rural Egypt, she has written several memoirs, including a 3-volume autobiography and an account of her time in prison. The historical insights from her 65-year career in medicine are particularly valuable since they chronicle dramatic shifts in women's professional roles in medicine in the Middle East circa 1955 to 2021. 41 From reading her works, younger women physicians who now benefit from greater opportunities ushered in by the second-wave feminist thinking that she inspired will understand the obstacles that their older women colleagues faced. Readers of El-Saadawi will gain additional insights into older patients who experienced medical treatment and provider-patient relationships in a very different manner in the past (for example, extreme medical patriarchalism). El-Saadawi's books on violence against women in Islam could also initiate research into the relationship of the history of gender violence and social hierarchies to bullying, harassment, and undermining in Middle East healthcare systems (an almost entirely neglected topic at the present time), which have now been recognized and partially addressed in developed nations through an examination of what has been characterized as the "hidden curriculum" in education.
Thus literature on pioneers and exemplary clinicians in Middle Eastern medicine could fill a gap for modelling desired behaviors in medicine where comprehensive physician competency frameworks are currently lacking. For instance, one of the few competency regimes in the Middle East, a medical professionalism framework of nine core domains, was only recently developed in 2016 in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) by consensus of a select group of Muslim medical authorities. Similar official frameworks are exceedingly rare in the Middle East as it is generally assumed that a good Muslim will also be a good and ethical physician. The UAE framework resembles western antecedents such as the UK General Medical Council's Good Medical Practice and Canada's CanMEDS in most respects except for item number one, "Commitment to Ihsan and adherence to ethical practice" which is described as the "Physician's pursuit of professional practice should derive from an internal sense of duty to pursue Ihsan, a sense of social responsibility from the belief that he or she is accountable to a higher being." 42 The term ihsan means to do beautiful (moral) deeds as if God were watching the believer and the inclusion of this item underscores again how Muslim societies frame all human activity including the profession of medicine within the scope of religious practice. Due to the highly multicultural makeup of the UAE (Emiratis account for only 12% of the total population, and are primarily Sunni Muslims), the new guidelines are problematic for atheists and non-theists.

WORKPL ACE ORG ANIZ ATION
Islam has developed several unique historical models and methods of care that have affected modern institutions in the Middle East and which can be revisited in imaging new ways of services provision. The Bimaristan (Persian: "place of the sick") provided publicly-funded health services and physicians financed directly by the Caliph often cared for the poor and the incurably insane. Notable was the use of aesthetics to aid in healing (based on Arabic-Galenic theories of the impact of environment on disease); in other words, Bimaristans provided a pleasant environment including gardens, open courtyards, and fountains which were used for hydrotherapy to calm patients, in addition to music therapy. Also, inspirational Quranic verses involving illness were often inscribed in the stone-work illustrating the belief that the Quran itself and recitation of its text provides healing powers. 43 As part of the Islamic architecture revival of the past decade, Qatar's multi-billion dollar Sidra Women's and Children's hospital in Doha, Qatar incorporated many traditional elements of the bimaristan, such as healing gardens and water.
Many hospitals historically and today throughout the Muslim world are endowed through the system of waqf, or perpetual charitable endowment. This practice not only serves to redistribute wealth and prevent the intergenerational accumulation of resources among Muslim families, but also reminds the community of the duty to provide for the sick according to the fundamental Islamic pillar of Zakat or charity. In conclusion, health policy or service provision change can only occur if one is willing to imagine other ways of doing things, and the past constitutes a reference manual of different institutional structures, care models, and professional behaviors.

MEDICAL HISTORY IN THE MIDDLE E A ST IN ACTION: SA MPLE ACTIVIT Y TO HARNESS HISTORY FOR REFLECTION IN MEDICAL ETHICS
In 2006, I developed the following activity on medical oaths, which I have presented to clinicians in ACCME training workshops and medical and premedical students in humanities classes to promote reflection on medical ethics and professionalism. The project is generally preceded by a module on Islamic medical ethics and/or the history of Islamic medicine. Participants then write their own oath summarizing in bullet point form or aphoristic style their views on the appropriate rules and guidelines of conduct of a healthcare worker (or if they do not believe in the value or practicality of oaths to guide conduct, they can prepare arguments against the use of oaths). A debriefing and group discussion is then led by the instructor. The activity collates past wisdom on moral behavior in medicine from previous medical oaths, and allows for reflection on the core principles of physician ethical conduct as well as the purposes and practicality of professional oaths.

WHAT WOULD A MIDDLE E A ST MEDICAL SCHOOL CURRICUL A FOR THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE LOOK LIKE?
The preceding discussion has hopefully established that history and historical precedent continue as a living tradition in all facets of Islamic life, including medical training and practice. I therefore recommend that medical schools in Muslim-majority nations formally teach Islamic medical history in conjunction with medical ethics and cultural competency, and that universities develop related specialized courses taught by relevant experts on Islamic law, history, ethics, and theology for Continuing Medical Education. Realistically, a three to six month medical school course would integrate the following humanistic topics in the suggested syllabus below: Islamic Medicine: History and Applications

Islamic Medical Ethics
Trace the development of decision-making in medieval thought, fiqh councils, internet fatawa (opinion) sites, and Muslim medical associations. Discuss modern ethical issues in the context of historical precedent. Analyze deliberative processes and landmark historical rulings and principles. Texts: al-Ruhawi's Adab al-Tabib, "Practical Ethics of the Doctor," and modern overviews such as Sachedina and Atighetchi. 45 Cultural Competency Provide an overview of the history of pre-Islamic and Islamic cultures leading to current cultural diversity in the Muslim world. Discuss differences in Islamic sects and how culture and religion affect medical services provision and the provider-patient relationship. Texts: Nasr's Islam: Religion, History, and Civilization or Armstrong's Islam: A Short History. 46 Islamic Ways of Knowing (Epistemology) Explore historical means of understanding the world through scripture, debate, logic, experiment, etc. with reference to traditional knowledge systems in Islam. Texts: Excerpts from the works of Ibn Sina, Al-Ghazaly, Ibn Rushd, Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, and historian of Islamic philosophy Peter Adamson.

History of Science and Medicine in Islam
Demonstrate common medical traditions in Eastern and Western societies, and discuss core principles that led to medical progress (close observation, professional frameworks, desire for knowledge, lingua francas, scientific networks and research and translation centers -bayt al hikmah, etc). Texts: chapters from standard reference works; currently there is no accurate, brief, and comprehensive non-specialist overview of the topic with the exception of Khan and Ullmann. 47

Medical Luminaries in Islam
To instill pride in Muslim medical students and serve as guides in ethics and practice. Texts: entries from biographical dictionaries and encyclopedias.

Traditional and Folk Medicine
Learn about continuing folk medical practices and their relationship to history and religion, with emphasis on mental illness. Understand the actual practices and the ingredients in current therapeutic substances and their potential benefits, harms, and contraindications. Discuss strategies to negotiate common Muslim patient perceptions that mental illness is supernatural in origin. Texts: article packet.

CONCLUSION
In conclusion, I suggest that healthcare practitioners in Muslim majority countries educate themselves or seek continuing professional development training at a university on the historical dimensions of medicine in the region in order to: 1) trace the history of Muslim thought (philosophy and theology), with special reference to how medical ethics decisions are currently decided in various madhhabs of shariah law to inform their clinical and research practice, 2) gain knowledge of the history of the Islamic caliphates and the cultural diversity of the Middle East arising from indigenous cultures to better empathize and communicate with the range of peoples living in the region (cultural competency),